Family and household characteristics

A range of risk factors for child abuse and neglect have been identified in Australian and international research. A profile of the families and households involved in the Queensland child protection system has been developed to provide a better understanding of the families Child Safety works with.

These family risk factors include domestic and family violence, substance misuse, intergenerational experience of abuse or neglect, mental illness, and criminal history.

Graphs

Prevalence of family risk factors in substantiated households, Queensland, 2013-14 to 2017-18

Proportion of the number of risk factors in substantiated households, Queensland, 2017-18

Tables

Description

Annual

Quarterly

FP.1: Prevalence of family risk factors in substantiated households, Queensland

What is the family risk evaluation?

Risk assessment is a fundamental component of the Child Safety investigation and assessment phase, and considers information about the child, their family, and the physical and social environment.

The purpose of the family risk evaluation is to provide an objective evaluation about the probability of further incidents of abuse or neglect by a parent in the family, which may result in harm to a child in the next 12 to 24 months, and help guide decision-making about the need for intervention with the family to reduce the likelihood of future harm.

The family risk evaluation is completed after all investigation and assessment information has been gathered, and prior to the determination of the investigation and assessment outcome. One family risk evaluation is completed per parent's household.

Most questions relate to the parent who has primary responsibility for the care of the child, such as the parent who assumes most of the child care responsibility in the household, or the legal guardian of the child.

Why this topic is important

Family support services have been established across Queensland to provide vulnerable families and children with access to high-quality services at the right time to help them to maintain the family unit.

In response to the findings of the Queensland Child Protection Commission of Inquiry, the Queensland Government is expanding the statewide network of family support services to ensure there is greater mix of services tailored to support vulnerable children and families before their problems escalate to intervention by Child Safety.

Understanding the characteristics of families and households involved in the Queensland child protection system informs the development of policy and programs, from prevention and early intervention through to permanency planning.

Trends

Child Safety is increasingly working with more complex families. Over the nearly six years to 31 March 2019, there has been an increase in the prevalence of risk factors within households where a child experienced significant harm and/or was at risk of significant harm.

For the 12 months ending 31 March 2019:

In 66 per cent of households, a parent had a current or past drug/alcohol problem (compared to 60 per cent in 2013-14).

52 per cent of parents had a criminal history (45 per cent in 2013-14).

53 per cent had a current or previously diagnosed mental illness (42 per cent in 2013-14).

50 per cent had experienced domestic and family violence within the last year (43 per cent in 2013-14).

42 per cent of parents had been abused as a child (42 per cent in 2013-14).

Almost three out of every four households (74 per cent) had more than one of these risk factors, compared to 69 per cent in 2013-14.

Prevalence of ICE in families of children entering care

More than 1 in 3 children (36 per cent or 810 children) who came into care of the department during the year ending 31 March 2019 had a parent with current or previous methamphetamine use recorded, up from 30 per cent a year ago and 34 per cent last quarter.

In most cases (68 per cent) the type of methamphetamine was ICE.

In the majority of cases (70 per cent) where parental ICE use was recorded, it was reported to have occurred in the last 12 months, but not prior to that. This indicates most of these parents had recently begun using ICE.

Parent profile reports 2006-07

Characteristics of parents involved in the Queensland child protection system is a series of reports building a picture of the families we work with.

Report 1: Demographic profile (PDF, 307 KB) details the types of households, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander as well as young parent households, the types of harm that occur and households where a child was assessed as being in need of protection.